MABT & MIT’s Science of the Eye Program presents Science of the Eye:
Bringing Vision into the Classroom
“Science of the Eye: Bringing Vision into the Classroom,” is a series of regional workshops for Massachusetts high school biology teachers. Nearly every student has a personal connection to vision science, whether they wear glasses or contacts, or have a family member with cataracts or macular degeneration. The workshops will capitalize on this connection to students’ lives and help teachers broaden students’ outlook on potential careers in vision science-related fields.
Topic I: Eye Development and Anatomy
This workshop will introduce lab activities to explore eye development and anatomy in model organisms. Activities that are included in the workshop will address mutations that lead to eye developmental defects and the effects of ethanol exposure to vision in Fetal Alcohol Syndrome. In addition, a cow eye dissection will be incorporated into a discussion of the anatomy of the eye and eye diseases or problems that affect different components of the eye. The workshop is designed to incorporate material from the Massachusetts high school science curriculum frameworks and demonstrate to teachers how to excite, engage and deepen students’ understanding of this material using hands-on laboratory science experiments.
Time and Place
Thursday, October 8, 2009, at UMass-Amherst’s new Integrated Sciences Building, Room 364. Sign-in from 4 to 4:30 p.m. Workshop 4:30 to 6:30 p.m.
Instructor
Ishara Mills-Henry, Ph.D., an accomplished biochemist who has led workshops for high school science teachers on the evolution of the vertebrate eye and the structures of proteins involved in vision. Dr. Mills-Henry has a special interest in finding ways to engage students, particularly underserved students, in science education before they decide that science is not for them, as far too many middle school and high school students continue to do.
Cost and Credits
The workshops are free of charge and will offer two hours of professional development credit, or two PDPs, as one of a multipart series of workshops offered through the spring of 2010. Coffee and a light snack will be provided to all participants. Parking passes are available for a modest fee.
To register or for more information, contact Outreach Coordinator Lisa Guisbond at:
• E-mail: guisbond@mit.edu
• Telephone: 617-258-7899
Directions to UMass/Amherst
* From the North: from I-91 South, take Exit 25 in Deerfield. At the end of the ramp, turn left and follow road to the intersection. Turn right onto Routes 5 & 10 South. Go 1 mile, then turn left onto Route 116 South. Follow 8 miles to UMass exit.
* From the East: From Route 2 West, take exit 16 (Belchertown/Amherst). Follow Route 202 for about 15 miles to blinking light at Route 9 and 116 Amherst exit (Pelham). Turn right and follow for 7 miles to Amherst center. Follow signs to UMass. From I-90 (Mass
Pike), take exit 4 (West Springfield). Follow I-91 North to Exit 19. From the exit ramp, turn right onto Route 9. Travel approximately 4.5 miles to Route 116 North (turn left at traffic lights). UMass exit is 1 mile.
* From the South: From I-91 North, take Exit 19 in Northampton. From the exit ramp, turn right onto Route 9. Travel approximately 4.5 miles to Route 116 North (turn left at traffic lights). UMass exit is 1 mile.
* From the West: From Route 2 East, follow to Greenfield/I-91 exit. Take I-91 South to exit 25 in Deerfield. At the end of the ramp turn left and follow the road to the intersection. Turn right onto Routes 5 & 10 South. Go 1 mile, then turn left onto Route 116 South. Follow for 8 miles to the UMass exit. From I-90 (Mass Pike), take exit 4 (West Springfield). Follow I-91 North to Exit 19. From the exit ramp, turn right onto Route 9. Travel approximately 4.5 miles to Route 116 North (turn left at traffic lights). UMass exit is 1 mile.
The Integrated Sciences Building is on Stockbridge Road. For a detailed campus map, go to
http://www.umass.edu/visitorsctr/downloads/campusmap.pdf
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